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It’s All About Timing

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California’s wireless phone companies are feeling the heat for their practice of rounding customers’ usage times up to the nearest minute or nearest 30 seconds.

In a lawsuit filed in Sacramento County Superior Court, a San Diego attorney has accused 25 of the state’s wireless firms--including regional carriers L.A. Cellular, AirTouch, Pacific Bell Mobile Services and Sprint PCS--of unfair business practices. Except for business-oriented Nextel Communications, it is common for wireless companies to round up customer usage to the next minute, charging consumers who talk for 1 minute and 36 seconds for a two-minute call, for example.

Most companies disclose their incremental billing policies, but attorney David Franklin argues that because the technology for per-second billing is readily available, the continuation of per-minute billing amounts to unlawfully forcing consumers to pay for service they don’t use.

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Several companies named in the lawsuit have defended their billing practices as legal and fully disclosed to customers.

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